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					Originally Posted by Philip
					
				 
				The size differential [between European and Moroccan flasks] could be  due to the necessity of [the latter] using more powder  in a load when  the powder was weak.  There exists a 1916 report by a  French  intelligence officer identified as Capt. Delhomme, entitled "Les  armes  dans le Sous Occidental" which describes the armament used by  tribal  peoples in Morocco, and his comments on gunpowder are  interesting.   Dehomme noted that powder was manufactured at various  locales and that  its quality was not consistent.  The quality varied  considerably from  here to there.  The overall market seemed to be rife  with shoddy  product made from inferior or adulterated materials, such as  unrefined  sulfur or sugar carbon (instead of proper charcoal).  Powder  made from  the latter was weak and unstable, losing whatever potency it  had after a  couple months. 
      
     The report, in English summary, can be read in S. James Gooding's   article "The Snaphance Muskets of al-Maghreb al-Aqsa" in the journal Arms Collecting, Vol 34, No. 3, pp 87-93. 
      
     The vagaries of unreliable supplies of good powder may also explain  the  preference for very long barrels, since the poor stuff was likely  to be  much slower-burning and thus it would be advantageous for the  bullet to  remain confined a bit longer to allow sufficient combustion  pressure to  build before it left the muzzle.   Likewise the tendency of  native  firearms in some tropical areas to have excessively long  barrels (by  Western standards) due to the moisture-absorbing nature of  the charcoal  in gunpowder, affecting its performance in humid climates. 
			
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 This quote from the thread on 
Moroccan powder flasks is worthy of further discussion without hijacking the original thread. 
  
  Philip is suggesting that gunpowder manufactured in the Maghreb and probably elsewhere in northern Africa, was very variable in quality, leading to long barrels that could allow for the inferior combustion properties of such powder. There are several components to his argument (variable and inferior qualities of gunpowder from the region; the intent to accommodate those qualities by producing longer barrels; a resulting increase in flask size to accommodate larger powder loads, etc.). I hope that Philip will elaborate further.
  
  Ian